:Th OREGON STATESMAN, Safera, Oregon, Tuesday Morning; October 16, 1S31 PACK FOUR Will the Pendulum Swing Back? J f "Wo Favor Sica8 Us; From First Statesman, March 28, 18511 , . THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO, ; Charles A. S PRAGUE - Editor-Manager Sheldon F. Sackett - Managing Editor t . Member of the Associated Presa The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for public, tlon or sll news dispatches credited U It or not otherwise credited la this paper. - - - . . c - ' v ADVERTISING Portland Representative - Gordon B Bell. Security Building, Portland. Ore. - " Eastern Advertising Representative Bryant, Ortffita Brunsonv lac, Chk-axe, New torn, Detroit. . Boston. Atlanta Entered at the Postoffiee at Salem, Oregon, as Second-Class Matter. Published every morning except Monday. , Business office, tlS S. Commercial Street. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 1 - Mall Subscription Bates. In Advance. Within' Oregon: Dally and Sunday. 1 Mo. SO cents;, S Mo. 91.28; Mo. 12.25; 1 year fi.QQ. tilsewhere cents per Mo, or S5.ee for 1 year In advance, ; Copr 3 tvnta. On trains and News Stands S cents. By City Carrier; 45 cents a month; ts og a year In advance. Per "- Bonneville and Oregon SENATOR CHARLES L. McNARY has endorsed a plan proposed by Joe E. Dunne, candidate for governor, who in an address Friday night urged that steps be taken, to in sure that the benefits from Bonneville dam accrue to the states of Oregon and Washington. Two plans were suggest ed: first, that the plant be turned over, to the two states when earnings pay for the plant; or second, that the states shire in the net earnings from the beginning, as at Boulder dani where Arizona and Nevada" each receive 1ST 3-4 per cent .; In this recommendation Senator Dunne has made a pro posal which may prove of great . The i republican candidate elected refer this question to the state hydro-electnc com mission to work out a plan. To this body might also be re ferred the general problem of government over the distribution and sale of the Bonneville power. The hydro-electric commission, representing the state, should work with whatever federal authority is created so that the Bonneville power may vantage and for the benefit of the people. This means frankly a consideration of: existing facilities : whether these should be taken over into public ownership ; or whether power should be distributed through private companies with regulation as to rates to be charged, as is ritory in the southeast; or whether independent competing lines should be built at public ; Surely such a study should be made before the state rushes into the electricity game pending grange power measure voted down. It is a hang-over orization of Bonneville and before the federal government entered the picture. X' There should be a carefully worked out plan instead of state ownership with its threat of bankruptcy to existing concerns and threat of tax burdens to private citizens. ' The whole problem both of distribution of the juice and of din lion of the earnings of the plant tent and unbiased group. Candidate Dunne has offered - t - ; 4 m Hi all the campaign arguments of all the candidates. .-' Stevedore Wages THE arbitration board has fixed longshore wages at 95c an hour and $1.40 per hour for overtime. Since this is the conclusion of the arbitral ed by the publie as fair and by the parties to the dispute whe ther they are satisfied or not. To our country mind, the rates seem excessive in consideration of the character of the work tnd prevailing wage scales in other lines. The weekly wage is reduced by the 30-hour limitation. But the effect of the in crease will be felt in charges goods moved over, the docks, , mately by ;consumers. . Every since the war the general scales of wages and prices have been more favorable to urban than to rural dwellers. Fresh, wage increases now causing higher selling prices serve to postpone the parity which agriculture needs The consequence is a further ' Tents the free interchange of various economic groups, particularly between rural and city groups. V . The truest interest of labor lies in steady employment at fair wages. This comes when there is an equitable rela tionship all the way round, so for labor in all lines of occupation. Wages in themselves are meaningless except' as related in money may be low m purchasing power if prices are high, What is needed at the present time more than increase in wage rates is fuller demand so that more workers may be employed and those on part time be given full time employ- menu we nave a ieeung tnac for the stevedores will not promote the balance which is bad ly needed Speaking of wages, it certainly is pitiful to read of the strike lm a coal .mine in Hungary where the miners wen into the, coal, pit and threatened suicide unless their wages ' ' ' . . n m An a mm e m t art a . a were increased irom, z to .ov per wees. sucn wages must be below subsistence levels even in Hungary. Surely we do not know how Well off we are, people of all classes, here in America. -. . - . 'German ; Lutherans Resist GERMAN Christians are waging a battle for liberty of VJT worship against the Hitler regime which nazifies the church And makes it but a tool ophy as developed, by leaders barbaric conceptions of might Christian conception of brotherhood and love. While in Ger many, the church has long 1 been identified with the state, ana loyal to the state, large numbers of the Lutheran clergy, schooled in the theology of grace only throurh Jesus Christ bitterly resent the new ideas the Hitler appointee, Mueller, to crush out aU resistance in -. iflis resistance is one oi many 11 inner rails in his attempt to crush church indepen dence the reaction against him succeed then the fascist corporate state gets fresh draugh of power. :;f w: v-W..:.- - : - v On many fronts the battle of the "corporate state", in which the individual is iust an insignificant atom. All collectivist philosophy 'exalts the state and debases the individual The American conception ' (until recent years) has been to' elevate and emancipate the individuaL In this country the new philosophy of the "total itarian- state is gaining a foothold in the attempts to social ize various functions. It is a dangerous trend. It may be tha the recalcitrant Lutherans fighting to maintain their inde pendence are fighting our battles too. Arkansas doesn't seem to be giving Pretty Boy Floyd, the same welcome iti Is Schoolboy Itowe, who Is coming back from Detroit after marrying his home town sweetheart. - Nudism and new dealism coat'oK your back. Corvallta Yoa're wrong, Claade.' Both Another tragedy la the Balkan's. King Carol's red-headed mis tress has married one of his bodyguards. . . No Fear Shall Atce'' value to the state. for governor said he would if cooperation with the federal be used to the very best ad the case in part of TVA ter expense. f v on a $65,000,000 scale. The to be voted on, ought to be measure from before the auth deserves study by a compe m board it will perforce be accept for every hundred weight of and so by producers and ulti- state of unbalance which pre- goods and services between there is a sustained demand to the price level. High wages wage scales sucn as approved : of the state. The nazi philos like Alfred Rosenberg exalts and race 'and denounces the of the nazis and are resisting as reichbishop, in his attempts the church , to the -new regime tne most nopeiui signs in tier will be severe. "If he should wages against the conception are similar. Both will tafce the Gazette-Times. " will peel off your undershirt UeACTtO M FFtOf ill approva Mew d$al toucies HI lM6ui t)?Au V9l ( ps.1u 1 Bits For Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Granddaughter of Cyrus Shepard visitor In Salem i S (Continuing from Sunday:) No trees of the firs and oaks that shaded that historic spot in tha period aner review ara found there new. Tha bodies were later removed to the Lee Mission cemetery, and rest in (as the writer believes) the second grave opened in that God's acre; the one 'for Jason Lee'g second, wife, who had been Lucy Thompson, and who died March 29, 1842, being the first Cyrna Shepard died at the mis sion Jan. 1, 1840. He had lived a life of singular usefulness. In the. last few years of which he made aa impress upon the his tory of Oregon, the United States and the world that will last as long as historic memorials shall be preserved. The wedding cake made at Hon olulu in the winter of 1838 for the king was - for Kamehameha in, for his Betting a rather up standing ruler, who encouraged trade with Oregon's early settler ments. The Shepard diary, reported lost beyond recovery by Mrs. Trailer, was at one time In pos session of Willamette university, and is now in the files of the Methodist missionary society in rniiadeipnia.or New York; the writer thinks in New Tork, though it more properly belongs in Phila delphia, headquarters of the soci ety that sent Jason Lee and his Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M.D. By ROYAL 3. COPELAND, M. D. United States senator from New York . Former CommUtioner of Beallh, Vev. Tork Ottv RECENTLY THE United States publie health service baa reported an un usual number ef oases of "trtchl noalJiV tenia can be attributed to carelessness In cooking pork and pork products. A timely , warning may be sufficient to : prevent fur ther increase m this disease. Trichinosis Is caused by eating the flesh ef pigs that are Infected with parasite with s big name, the "trichinella spiralis". This la the only way la which the worm Dr.Copclani can be transmit ted to man. : It is resistant to ordi nary cooking and la its encysted form requires thorough boiling before ; It Is destroyed, : I"ood poisoning can osually be traced to negligence a the cooking, -preserving or smoking' of certain foodstuffs. Though federal and state law require strict snperrUion of aS meats, tt hi someUmee difficult to dis tinguish the presence ef trichinosis la aa animal For this reason It Is advtsabla to cook- tbereugbry perk ana aa pers products, SysaptesM ef TrUkla ' Qmtrsy te popular belief the victim of trichinosis does not con tract the disease Immediately upon eating the Infected meat. Several days may elapse befftre any pain is felt.- Nausea, vomiting, cramps, dlar- rnea or constipation soon follow. The victim complains of " chills. fever and sweats. Bis face become swollen. The upper eyelids may swell and distort the appearance of the face. In many instances the pa tient becomes exceedingly m. The -ailment may be so severe as to mask the underlying cause. Because ef the presence ef enms. I' ; : i - - - Jf j.- - ' J' ,i . - j'-) ' ' party to the Oregon country In 1834. The first all white child born la the Oregon country was Alice Clarissa Whitman, at Waiilatpa, the Whitman mission. The second (and first white boy) -was Jason Lee White, son of Dr. and Mrs. Elijah White, in July, 1836, at the Lee mission, 10 miles below the site of Salem. The third (and second boy) was Joseph Beers, Sept.. 18, 1837, at the lame place. In 1882 he was the oldest native American in Oregon. The fourth child (and second girl) was Eliza Spaulding, at Lap wai. Nov. 15, 1837. The fifth (and third boy) was Jason Lee's son, June 23, 1838, at the Lee mission. A ton was born Dec. 7, 1838, to Rev. and Mrs. Elkanah Walk er at the American Board mis sion near the site of Spokane; the first all white boy born ia present Washington. Anna Maria, grandmother of Mrs. Traxler, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Shepard at the Lee mission in 1838, and at about the same time a son was born to Rev. and Mrs. H. W. K. Per kins, at Wascopam (The Dalles) mission. Anna Maria Shepard was thus the sixth, seventh or eighth all white child born in the Oregon country, (Probably the sixth.) A boy was . born to Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gray at the American Board mission, Lapwal (now Ida ho), in 1831. He was J. 1L D. fever and oansea the disease la oftaa confused with typhoid fever. Suf fers front Mcaiaeels soar develop bronchial complications and In severe cases a serious form of rheumatism sometimes occurs. This disability may last for several years and Is ex-. eeedlngly difficult te Coek Perk Thoroughly Mild cases hut for only a few days, while severe cases ef trichinosis nay persist for several weeks. In some Instances tt advisable te remove the sufferer te a hospital where he will receive the treatment necessary tor the prevention ef compIkaUeas. As X have pointed out. tricninesis is cot transmitted te man by man. It Is not a contagious disease and can only be . caused by the eating ef spoiled and Infected meat. It la pre ventable, and when adequate meas ures are taken the disease Is rarely encountered. ;:0jL . w' " For this reason the disease Is sel dom seen in large dues. Xa those communities , where . the , proper slaughter house facilities are lacking, additional care and precaution must When cooking pork, make sure that it la cooked thoroughly and that the center ef the meat is white as well as the edges, . ; ; AMwete to Health Qeerie Imts. n. it. tl awin rottpreaxe tell me what to do Cor cystitis. A. Rest in bed is most essential la order te help overcome' this 41a ease. For fun particulars, restate your question and send a stamped, Mlf-addressed aavelope. . ; Miss L. S. : Ox-What can be done for poor circulation? X: My heart beat is very irregular. What d you advise In such cases? A. Improve 'the general .health and your circulation win Improve. For full particulars send 'a self -addressed, stamped envelope and repeat your question. 4 2: Heart conditions must bare very careful medical at tention, Follow your doctor's ad- ' Vice. - ' ' V ; vj (Copyright. I9j, ST. F. lucj L OF Gray, prominent in Oregon his tory. He waa thus presumably the ninth all white child born ia the Oregon country. His sister. who became Mrs. Jacob Kamm, waa bora at the same place Oct. 18, 1819. After a year or more of widow hood, Mrs. Shepard was married to J. L. Whltcomb, as heretofore indicated. Now, as to the letter mentioned by Mrs. Flaxler, a copy of which she furnished to Miss Gay. She is Theresa Gay. Berkeley, Cal., who has written a book on the lite of Anna Maria Pittman Lee, soon to be published, which will fill needed gaps in early Oregon history. Miss Gay has kindly cop- led the letter for the writer. It Is dated "Mission House, Wiliam ette River, Oregon Territory, Sep tember, 1835." It is directed "Dear Susan, ' meaning Susan Downing, then at Lynn, Mass. The ful text i reserved for another book on which Miss Gay is now working, but a review of it is giv en below: He wrote that, "through the unbounded goodness of Almighty God." he was once more permit ted .to address her la the land of the living, though It was with a weak and trembling hand la consequence of an attack of ague and fever with which he bad been afflicted at intervals for several weeks, and which at times reduced blm to a quite low condition. He said oth er members of the mission had suffered from the same disorder. but au were thea recovering. But, he said, he must hasten to the more immediate reason for his communication, and would opea the way by Informing her that female assistaice was much needed at the mission, and ap peared Indispensably necessary to Its future prosperity with the blessing of God for he knew that without-the blessing of God neither male nor female would ever effect "any good In this be nighted land." He told her he had admired her xeal in "t h cause of tha heathen" and the wil lingness she had shown to give up all tor the sake of going among them' to endeavor to better their condition. From these considerations and others he said he seed not name. he told her she seemed, best suit ed to his choice of a companion for life: that she seemed to be the "person destined by Provi dence to share with him "the joys and sorrows of this life, its tolls and cares. -. He therefore . thought fit to write her; and request, it she was under no otheY obligation and was willing to confer on him "the greatest of earthly blessings," she would inform P. L. Edwards, the bearer of the letter to her, that he might certify the same to the officers of the missionary society at New York, and thereby a way be prepared for her to sail with others that might be sent ouL He said; "Bro. E. (Edwards) came to us from Missouri and has sow tarried the time tor which he came and It he goes as expected he has promised to call at Lynn. He suggested that in case Ed wards did not go all the -way, other means, which he named, be resorted to In securing the prop er, certification to the missionary society. - (P. L. .Edwards and Courtney M. Walker had been en gaged tn Missouri for a year by Jason Lee in 1888 to come wltn his party to Oregon as teachers, and Edwards was now on' the point of returning.) - -A, - Shepard admonished haste, that Miss Downing should not be too late for the ship that .might tall soon. He wrote: -?-.:': ' - If : you ' decide to come, : you must at the same recollect "that you are . about to enter a field of toll and anxiety where you will be liable fo meet with frequent discouragements. We who are here have often found It, soy al ready. I He apoke of the unstaMe Indian' "character; told her promising 1 native bor -kad; ; run away, and his people had sold ' STOOPSXV:-. 1 Susan' Broderick, .. young and pretty member of a poor but aris tocratic family, is engaged te Wal lace SUfi en,, promising young banker. Sasaa Is exceptionally fond ol . Wallace but ia not- sure that she loves him. Although she doesn't realise it, Susan is mors attracted by Alien Sholea, the new roomer, whom lies weokblah rela tives I gnore. Uncle Worthy, Us wife Edna and Aunt Lntie, stin consider themselves the cream of society and' will not tolerate anyone they regard beneath them. That is why they discourage Su san s and John a (her brother) friendship for Uncle Arthur Cul lea and his family, their late mother's relatives. John, tired of bis relatives ' superior attitude, upbraids them for being snobbish. Christmas morning, Morris Brod erick, Swan's father, stuns the family with the news that he is to marry Mrs. Hopper, a widow. John takes Allen to the Cull ens for dinner, leaving Susan to help entertain her aunts and uncle's guests. That afternoon, Sara Cul fen phones asking Susan to leave the old folks and join them. While dressing, Susan keeps thinking ef Allen, hoping something will make hint look at her the way men do her cousin, Mary. The party at Collens is a gay, informal affair. Susan, preparing a salad la the pantry, feels someone gad eg at her and looks up to see Allen standing there. Finding them there, Mary asks: "Susie Broder ICk, is this any way for an engaged girl to act? Cornering a perfectly nice man whom I've picked to be my own particular partner for the evening I : Allen asks Satan if she is really engaged. As she looks up at hira to answer, she realises It is Allen as4 not Wallace she loves. Susan confides in ktr aunt. NeU Cullen, who advises bet not to an nounce her engagement. Tare days . later, however. Saaaa is stunned to see her pie tore and the announcement in the paper. Aunt Edna had given it, te the society reporter. CHAPTER. XVn "It waa announced yesterday re ally," uid Lutic "We told a few people, and later en voir father came home from Mrs. Hopper's, and he and your Uncle Worthy let everybody know about it. "They were drinking your health and Wallace's aU ever the house, chimed in Aunt Edna. "I think they had quite a bit too much Christmas cheer in the egg nog. Onita a hit.' "Yen ust imagine tt," said Uncle Worthy. Aunt Edna sniffed. "Well, yen put enough into it te make yon dance around aS afternoon after Jessie Bunts, like a clown r she said. I noticed her goggling at you. too." In Aunt Edna's eyes Uncle Worthy was a great lever, irresisti ble to all women. e e e That afternoon n delivery truck from Hart's store stooned in the snowy street entside the house and the Soy came running up to the deer with a Package tor Baaan. Inside the cover ef the paste board box that the green paper wrappings revealed jay Connie Sarre's r&timr card with "Love front Connie", written across it, and under the layers ef white ttsroe pa per was a wadded silk breakfast coat of a dim and subtle Pink. "It's an enarasement present." Lutie cried in rapture. "Oh, but won't it be iust the thine to wear when you and Wallace have break fast in your own hotel room on your honeymoon , , if s perfect I Ire been wishing l could get yon ens. but I just don't seem to have the Hoaer rurht now. Susan lifted the coat from the box. "If I'd rone o business school and got a position somewhere aa I ought to have done two or three years ago. I could buy my own thinrs now. Lutie." Oh. we'll ret a trousseau to gether for you, somehow er other," acid Aunt Edna. "We have almost six moat hi before June, and we're coins? te start cutting down our household expenses right ' away. Your uncle and I had n long talk about it yesterday. We've decided to let Anna ro after aU" Susan's eyes flew open. "Let Anna get" Two weeks before Aunt Edna had said that under ne eireum- him into slavery to another tribe, etc., etc. He spoke about "ague and fever" that had in five years carried oft thousands of the poor natives; bat said no white person had so far died from the scourge. (Present day physicians differ as to just what it was these mission aries and their neighbors, the earliest settlers, called "ague and (Continued on page 10) Editorial Comment From Other Papers SAM BROWN UKLOADS ins mow Typical of the degeneration which afflicts political life In Oregon is tha attack which. Mar rion county's Sam Brown haa di rected at Joe Dunne, the repub lican candidate for ' governor. Reading suen an attack one can see In It only the - bitterness of a defeated candidate. . ' Senator ; Brown, . nominally a republican, does , not- choose to Jeopardize that nominal standing by stating a preference for Mar tin pr Zimmerman or Wlrth or Silverman or CorreU. He Is eon tent to denounce his Jucky rival at tha primaries as "a political "trimmer.".. ; . Logically, the support of Sen ator Brown should go to Zim merman, with whoee muddled ideas of economic reform, he has much in common, but apparently his bitterness extends also to the Yamhill colleague who was able to capitalise the discontent to which Brown appealed la. the pri mary. ' , It Is a poor defense for Dunne O 0 0 Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops Checks Colds First Day, Headaches or Neuralgia : -ia'SO Minutes Most Speedy Remedies Known stancea would aha discharge Anna. Susan remembered clearly how de termined aha had been in ner decla ration that there was no need for it. What could have happened since that time to make her change her mind? . . ' "You see. your father has always contributed something toward the upkeep of this house, susan.- ane began to explain, ana noiamg uw breakfast coat arainst her breast. Susan listened. . There has always been money from the rents and one thing and another., and according to your Grandfather Broderkk's will. Lone and wortny ana roar father divided the income thrae ways Well, v yesterday v your fa ther asked Worthy to send; him next month's check in Havana and he borrowed a hundred dollars from "What do jren saeaa?" asked Susan. wt.;.4 ... him besides, That makes things a little embarrassing all around. Yon see that, dont yon?" "What de you meanr" askca -n. That he didnt leave any money behind to pay ray board?" Her aunt nodded. Then IU be Turin here at tout expense from now eat" Her ant Jerked her massive head up and down. Teabut af- aa twenty dollars week for xvar beard and. his that is, until your father starts lookta after you again. Your Uncle Worthy spoke te John about it this morning." "X cant let John spend his money mm Mm on me, snsan saia siowiy, ner eye brows almost meeting in n worried fxewn above her eyes. . . . John was lrf very little. Twenty dollars was aeere than half of the amount of his ejus cheek every week, and Susan felt certain that there was sense sort ef understanding between hhn and Cennte Sayre. In all prob ability they intended to be married aa seen aa John was earning enough te keep up a home of his own. No, the simply could not be a mill stone around John's neck. "What I've got to do is to get me work to do and make some money ef my own, Aunt Edna." But while she said it the thought ran through her head that she waa not trained te do any kind of work that paid a decent salary. She had two years ox musie lessons, ana she could play few simple thinrs like the Waldteuf el waltzes, but she certainly did not begin to know enouru about music to teach it. One summer Aunt Edna had let her take riding lessons at a North Carolina to remari thai It would be pos sible to go into the record of Senator Brown and find a long list of actions which could be condemned as inconsistent or re prehensible. There Is on Senator Brown's farm, for instance, a deep "well paid for by Oregon State college funds which the au ditors have questioned. Voters will be wise if they dis miss the Brown speech as an un savory incident. On the part of aU ' the candidates and on the part of the newspapers and or ganization supporting t hem there has been : already n ; dis gusting s display of "destructive" tactics and the small minded bickering which leads only to be wilderment. : ;--; Even at this late hour, the problem with most 'voters Is to decide hew to make a wise eholee for : Oregon. The fantastic Zim merman's only chance depends on a hopeless split between Dunne and Martin. The impres sionable Dunne,' listening to a babble of advisers has been un able to demonstrate that practi cality which he really possesses. The salty personality of Gen. Martin has" been burled under the series of Pollys Jxa disguises arranged by. his political coun sellors. . ' Meantime," tha i culmination of such a situation, there ap pears on the horizon, the figuro of Mr. Willis Mahoney. For man weeks, there have been rumors that Mahoney would "throw the hooka into Martin" as Brown has Into Dunne, but Mahoney Is too . ILeUeWtrae eVyjaetcatadU J;l. mSSammw . mountain resort, one winter she had had dancing lessons, and when she was thirteen she had gone to n cer tain Mademoiselle De Hamel every Saturday morning to talk French. She had learned to say grace In French and - that was about the extent of her learning in that grace ful language. Those vague accom plishments were all the education she had in addition to what she had received in her twelve years ia the public schools. - - l She could not typewrite, and she knew nothing about even the sim plest kind of office work. . The only thing, in fact, that she did know and understand was housework the kind of work that Anna did ia the Brodericka' kitchen for eight dol lars a weekl A small bitter smile just barely twisted Susan's lips aa That he didn't leave any money 1,.1 she realized that she would prob- -ably be able to get a position as dish washer in a restaurant, er chamber maid in a hotel, without any diffi culty. This is certainly no time for you to start talking job again, Susan," said Aunt Edna, her corsets creak ing aa she leaned forward in her ehair to poke the grate fire. "When Anna gees next week there's going -to be mere than enough work to keep us three women busy in this house. Why, just think ef the wash ings, aloael" Her stout body sagged in the ehair as if all strength . went out of it at the very thought . . wi. uiv waaaiags. - setiaes, wnat kind of work could you do? Yon weren't brought up to earn your own living," She said it with a flar ing up of the Broderick family pride, "Dont J know iti" cried Susan. "But if t only had been I If I'd Just had the business course that rve begged for and begged for, I'd probably have a good position by this time." Other things trembled on her lips. The things that she had saia.te uem many times before when she had pleaded with them and her father to let her have the three hundred dollars that would have paid for a secretarial course at the Speneerlan Business College SOffStVWB, j It was no use te say them all again. It was too late to point out to them that office work waa much higher type ef labor than peeling vegetables and scouring bath tubs and helpinx Anna with the ironing in the laundry in the basement. (Te Be Continued) ewrrtM.II3t.leKtasl clever. With Zimmerman people waiting patiently for Mahoney io "do something for Pete," we at least have the answer. Mahoney will "do: something for Ma honey." He proposes to organize a group of 60,000 or more peo ple and use the 'initiative, the referendum and the recall to hold a club over whoever happens to be elected governor. By group action Mahoney proposes to rule the rulers and move the actual capital of Oregon to the Klamath basin. Saddest of all to contemplate la the fact that this dire thin; can happen because Oregon .is building the .land of milk ai d honey for political bushwhackers. Eugene Register-Guard. PafaMk atiinasB, Boniae Q ItaainfteeAakUtrtrrtbe CySiSfC sack. OrlMiraStut Old Reliable Method brings health to - the sick ; wixnuvr OPERATION ! ; 8. tV FOKQ, herb specialist, has had eight years' practice ia Cain a. No matter with what you are But tering, don't give up yourself, our wonderful herbs will positively : remedy disorders of the bladder, kid ney, stomach, constipation, ap pendicitis, piles, and throat, heart, lung, liver, asthma, ca tarrh, tumors, diabetes, rheum atism, headache and blood pois on, akin diseases - of - children and. male or female all ail ments. CHARLIE CHAN Chinese Medicine A Herb Co. 122 N Commercial SU Salem Daily Office Doors 0 to 6 pjn. San. A Wed. 0 to 10: SO a. on. Help Kidneys A If eSeitr feaetfaetoe kOeWs amd O BlsSier all vie mm gjj;